When we see records being broken and unprecedented events such as this, the onus is on those who deny any connection to climate change to prove their case. Global warming has fundamentally altered the background conditions that give rise to all weather. In the strictest sense, all weather is now connected to climate change. Kevin Trenberth

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Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Oceans Said to Absorb Fewer Emissions

Oceans Said to Absorb Fewer Emissions

TheEarth’s oceans, which have absorbed carbon dioxide from fuel emissions since the dawn of the industrial era, have recently grown less efficient at sopping it up, new research suggests.

Emissions from the burning of fossil fuels began soaring in the 1950s, and oceans largely kept up, scientists say. But the growth in the intake rate has slowed since the 1980s, and markedly so since 2000, the authors of a study write ina reportin Thursday’s issue of Nature.

The research suggests that the seas cannot indefinitely be considered a reliable “carbon sink” as humans generate heat-trapping gases linked toglobal warming.

“It’s a small change in absolute terms,” Dr. Khatiwala said. “What I think is fairly clear and important in the long-term is the trend toward lower values which implies that more of the emissions will remain in the atmosphere.”

To calculate the slowdown, Dr. Khatiwala and his collaborators created a mathematical model using tens of thousands of measurements of seawater collected over the past 20 years, including temperature, salinity and the presence of manufactured chlorofluorocarbons.

They then worked backward with the data to create a formula that estimates the accumulation of human-generated carbon dioxide in the oceans from 1765, the opening of the industrial era, to 2008.

Even as human-generated emissions of carbon dioxide increase, the oceans’ uptake rate growth appears to have dropped by 10 percent from 2000 to 2007, Dr. Khatiwala said.

The last major research effort to measure industrial carbon uptake in the oceans was published in a 2004 Sciencestudyled byChristopher Sabine.

His methodology was different but arrived at similar conclusions.

Dr. Sabine used carbon dioxide measurements taken by more than 100 cruise ships to come up with a single figure: the oceans’ total industrial carbon uptake until 1994.

Dr. Khatiwala’s approach provides estimates of ocean carbon storage for every year from 1765 to 2008.

“Sabine’s estimate was like a single fuzzy snapshot,” Dr. Khatiwala said. “We’ve gone from that to having a relatively short movie of what happened from the start of the industrial era.”

Dr. Sabine said he agreed with the analogy, pointing out that his estimate for uptake up to 1994 was very close to Dr. Khatiwala’s for that period.

“Even though the techniques are completely different, they are in consensus at the one point that we can compare them,” Dr. Sabine said.

Yet much work remains to be done to confirm the results and to expand upon them, Dr. Khatiwala said.

Dr. Sabine is in the midst of a follow-up study to his 2004 “snapshot” that he will again compare with Dr. Khatiwala’s “movie.”

Research ships are out measuring current carbon levels in the ocean, Dr. Sabine said, and he expects to have new results by 2012.

Other questions remain to be answered. Dr. Khatiwala’s team also made an estimate of carbon dioxide uptake by the land, for example.

The scientists were surprised to find that the Earth’s land might be absorbing more carbon dioxide than it was giving up. They speculate that plants might be absorbing more carbon dioxide, which would make them grow faster.

That is a research question for others, said Dr. Khatiwala, whose work is water-centric.

“We’re not land people,” he said, “but why and where this is happening is a topic of ongoing research.”